Unusually, she still runs all of them by her mum who has been incredibly supportive of her rapping from the start.

She records her sparse but insistent tracks with her feminine voice at Harrogate’s Warehouse studio with producer Dan Mizen.

One of her recent tracks Problem after Problem is, perhaps, it's her most personal to date - and it had a big impact online.

Sarah said: "I had a tough couple of months in all aspects. I thought I'd put all the things that had happened in my life into one song. There were some things in the lyrics that I had never told anyone.

Readers may not have heard of Replay but she has already made an impression inside the world of rap.

Most of her collaborations with other rappers happen online in the digital world.

It’s where she says she has come to the attention of the likes of Michael Neely, A&R man for legendary label Def Jam.

Surprisingly, Sarah didn’t make her live debut until she performed at music charity Orb during Knaresborough’s feva festival in 2012 but she absolutely loved it.

She said: “Harrogate hasn’t got much of a rap scene, you have to go to Leeds. The place was packed but I felt really confident beforehand. It it felt really good to be on stage.”

Sarah’s aim in the long run is simple - to have some sort of ‘normal’ career in rap.

"I've put so much time and effort into this it's unreal. I like taking pride in things. I like getting to the point. When I hear something good I need to be as good as that or I want to quit.

"It would be nice to become an established female rapper and tour properly."

The latest track Sarah - or Replay - is working looks at the issues around Black Lives Matter.

Should this unique and most unusual of rapperr fail to reach her goals, she says she still might consider a military career.

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